I Just Bought My Mpc 2000xl! Now What?!

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pipecock

Guest
What i mean is .... now what i think i need to do is start loading all the samples i've been cataloging for the past 6 years. yep... that's how long i've been waiting to buy this thing.
i got the basic model.
2mb, not expansion board, nothin.

I know absolutely NOTHING about operating this machine. i'm literally going to be learning this from the ground up. i know NOTHING. if anyone can give me any tips... i'll greatly appreciate it.
and.... for any interested... i'm planning on getting digi 001 and a midi controller for my mac g4 w/osx set up.
peace out and thanx.
 

vitaminman

IllMuzik Staff
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
Hey,

I've never owned one either, but this is what I think you should do:

1. Learn how to load samples into it. If you only have the basic model, you probably only have a floppy drive...you'll have to grab one of your sample disks, pop it into the drive, and load the sounds into RAM. Hopefully they're in Akai format and will be already mapped out across the pads.

2. Once you have sounds loaded into RAM and you can trigger them with the pads, you're going to have to learn how to use the sequencer. The sequencer allows you to record notes that you play with the drum pads. Don't try to do too much at first; just learn how to get the notes in by pressing record and playing notes with your fingers , then play them back.

Next you'll probably want to learn how to edit the notes that get recorded; sometimes you won't play them exactly in time, or you may hit the wrong notes...you can edit all of this very easily I imagine.

After that, you may want to learn how to 'step sequence' which allows you manually enter notes where you want them.

3. After that, you may want to learn how to make your own samples. Grab som of your favorite records or cd's, plug them into the audio inputs of the Akai, then record small passages into RAM and map them across the pads. There's a little graphic interface on the sampler, you can fine tune your loops and individual hits with it.


4. Things to purchase to increase the value and functionality of your sampler:

You'll run out of memory VERY quickly if you only have 2mb of RAM, that is only 20 seconds of cd-quality audio. RAM is dirt cheap right now, you can probably max it out for less than $50, this will allow you to store large sample banks into memory and have more sounds at your fingertips .

Get some sort of hard drive for it. Loading from floppy disks is painfully slow, and you are limited to banks of only 1.4mb. I don't know what kind of drive it can take; you can go with either a scsi or ide drive. I'm sure that you can connect an external scsi drive to it, something like a small 4 or 8gb drive will keep you sample happy for a long time. If it takes internal drives, I would go that route because it's one less thing to worry about.

You could also maybe plug a ZIP drive into it. The older ones only hold 100mb, newer ones hold 250mb, and the latest ones hold (I think) about 650mb. the only advantage to these is that they are removable and you can bring them places with you...other than that, I don't see any immediate advantage to them.

And last, get a cd-rom drive. Most sample libraries come on cd nowadays, you'll need a cd drive if you want access to them. I think you'll have to get an external drive, probably a scsi drive which cost a little more than ide drives, plus the cost of the external casing.

5. Once you've taken care of the sampler itself, figure out a way to connect it to your computer. With a computer you can easily edit sounds record full songs into a wave editor to burn to cd, do detailed sequencing with a good sequencer software, create and edit samples before transferring them to the sampler instead of loading them from a floppy or other storage medium, etc.

You'll need to get a scsi card for you computer and a scsi cable to connect it to the sampler, as well as sample editing software which knows how to transfer the audio across the scsi cable into the sampler's memory.

Software used for sample editing and transfer: Recycle, SoundForge, Wave Surgeon, among others.

The sampler itself on the MPC is not terribly good by modern standards, but you can make it better by editing your programs and multis from a computer as well. I think Akai has a program called MESA which will do this.

6. READ THE MANUAL. I cannot stress this enough. Most everything will be documented in the manual, hopefully there will be some tutorials on how to do some of the things I've described above.

If you didn't get a manual with your sampler, you can download it here:
http://www.americanmusicsupply.com/manualfiles.asp?item=AKA+MPC2000XL

6. Check back here with your questions, there are a lot of smart people here who use them, I'm sure they'd be willing to help you out.

Take care,

Nick
 
C

Copenhagen

Guest
I would immediately buy a couple of years storage of canned food and make a campfire around it, then I'd start exploring every aspect of it and make every pad bang until it broke...then i'd get it fixed and start over... :p
 
J

JAYBANGAH

Guest
Read........Read........Read..........

Read tha manual..............
 

beatzbybuddy

ILLIEN
ill o.g.
MPC 2000XL -

Yo What up doggz... What about the 8-out Card.
I have a Korg Triton Synth,
Proteus 2000
Mackie 24/8 Bus Board...

Will the 8-out card help me assign individual sounds from
the synths???

This is a question you didnt ask, but I think it will help both of us...

Any Answers??????????????????


What the helll does the card do.. Please explain?????

DirtyWhiteNY
 

vitaminman

IllMuzik Staff
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
Hey,

You got it! That's what the extra outputs are for, you could assign something like the drums to outputs 1/2, bass to outputs 3/4, synth sounds to outputs 5/6, etc. You would plug each of the outputs into the different inputs of your Mackie; from there you could add eq, send them to external FX boxes through the aux sends, send them to compressors from the direct outs, etc.

Take care,

Nick
 

beatzbybuddy

ILLIEN
ill o.g.
I got that part, but what I dont understand is how I get more sounds out my synths to the addition channels when I only have 2 MiDi ports A/B on the MPC? 8-out is 1/4 inch, but no midis??
 

vitaminman

IllMuzik Staff
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 1
Hey,

I'm not sure if I understand the question, but I'll try...



Each MIDI port can transmit 16 channels of information.

You will want to connect the A port of the Akai to the MIDI IN port of the Triton, and the B Port of the Akai to the MIDI In port of the Emu.

You will have to put both the Triton and Proteus into 'multi mode' in which it allows you to assign different sounds to different MIDI channels, such as drums on channel 1, bass on channel 2, strings on channel 3, SFX on channel 4, etc.

Once conncected, you can send note events from the Akai to either the A port (Triton) or the B port (Emu) instead of its own samples. When you send the note events to them, it triggers the sounds...

You could, in theory, have 32 completely different sounds playing at once because you have 2 synths that are able to play 16 sounds at once (2x16=32). I don't know how many tracks your Akai has, though, there may be a limitation of 16.

Once you have all the MIDI setup correctly, you could play sounds from the Akai, Triton and Emu all at the same time...they would get mixed in the Mackie and out to your speakers.

The extra 1/4" ports on the Akai are when you want to route your samples from it to the mixer independently, you cannot route the sounds of the synths through them unless you first sample them into the Akai.

I hope this helps,

Nick
 

inrctyhoodmusic

Muzik Militant
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 5
Dirty white you have to use the outs on the synths to go through the track board....or just use the mpc to mix it down
 

beatzbybuddy

ILLIEN
ill o.g.
What did you mean outs???? On each module, I have l and R out! Whats the subs outs for???? Sub -bus on the board?? Please help me??
 

inrctyhoodmusic

Muzik Militant
ill o.g.
Battle Points: 5
There should be a six out board on the back of your synth to separate each track....Like the mpc has 8 outs to separte drum sare hat ect..in the track board to mix down songs
 
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